Let Them Eat Creamy Boston Cake
Nowadays Americans think the only word that can possibly complete the phrase "Boston Cream" is "Pie." But in fact the Boston Cream Pie—a notoriously misnamed yellow sponge cake with cream filling and chocolate icing—did not appear in print until the 1870s, long after Catharine Beecher’s 1846 cookbook made "Boston Cream Cake" popular with those of a mind to imitate the dining fashions of New England’s metropolis. (She used "cake," singular, in her recipe title, but the result is definitely "cakes," plural.) To confuse matters further, Beechers’s recipe wasn’t the only one circulating at the time under the stylish name of Boston Cream Cake(s). In our opinion those other recipes, relying on heavier, scone-like dough, aren’t nearly as good as Beecher’s éclair-like concoctions. Her recipe produces a light, flaky pastry, which she suggests filling with cream (meaning pastry cream) or custard. It seems highly likely that she got the idea—and most of the details—for these elegant little cakes from the famous French chef Antonin Carême, Read More